A Brief Overview of Sex Offender Management Dr
A Brief Overview of Sex Offender Management Dr. Kurt Bumby Center for Effective Public Policy Panel Presentation at the United States Sentencing Commission’s Symposium on Alternatives to Incarceration July 14, 2008 Washington, DC
Percentage of Arrests Nationwide Attributed to Sex Offenses* *Forcible rape, other sex offenses (including hands-on and hands-off offenses ) (Federal Bureau of Investigation, 2007)
Percentage of Federal Prosecutions Attributed to Child Sex Exploitation Offenses* *Child pornography, transportation for illegal sexual activity, sex abuse (Bureau of Justice Statistics, 2007)
National Trends in Sex Offender Management Arrests for sex offenses (state level) Arrests/prosecutions for sex crimes (Federal level) Sex offenders incarcerated in state and Federal prisons Sex offenders placed on public registries Sex offenders requiring monitoring and/or supervision by law enforcement and/or probation/parole officials Sex offender-specific legislation introduced and enacted
Diversity of Sex Offenders • Label implies homogeneity – Research and practice reveal heterogeneity – Differences between adult and juvenile offenders • Key variations – Initiation and maintenance factors – Targets, behaviors – Intervention needs – Recidivism
Observed Recidivism Rates Over Time: Adult Sex Offenders as a Homogenous Group (Harris & Hanson, 2004)
Recidivism rate Observed Recidivism Rates of Adult Sex Offenders Over Time By Subgroup N = 4, 724 (Harris & Hanson, 2004)
Recidivism Rates: Previous Conviction vs. No Previous Conviction N = 4, 724 (Harris & Hanson, 2004)
Recidivism Findings • View through the under-reporting lens • Detected sexual recidivism rates relatively low – More likely to be non-sexual • Rates differ by subgroups
Static Risk Factors Associated with Sexual Recidivism Among Adult Sex Offenders • Prior sex offenses • Prior non-contact sex offenses • Unrelated victims • Stranger victims • Male victims (Hanson & Bussiere, 1998; Hanson & Morton-Bourgon, 2005)
Dynamic Risk Factors Associated with Sexual Recidivism Among Adult Sex Offenders • Victim access • Substance abuse • Deviant sexual interests • Supervision compliance • Attitudes supportive of offending • Collapse of social supports • Intimacy deficits, conflicts in intimate relationships – Family • Impulsivity – Work – Residence (Hanson & Bussiere, 1998; Hanson & Morton-Bourgon, 2005)
Implications • Policies, legislation • Prosecution, sentencing • Probation/parole supervision • Treatment interventions • Release, reentry • Victim needs and interests
Unique Challenges of Sex Offender Management • Under-reporting, under-detection • Heightened attention, scrutiny • Widespread myths, misinformation • Negative public sentiment • Exacerbated housing and employment challenges • Unknown impact, collateral consequences of sex offender-specific policy trends
The Comprehensive Approach to Sex Offender Management Investigation, Prosecution, and Sentencing Registration and Notification Fundamental Principles Assessment 1. Victim-Centeredness 2. Specialized Knowledge/Training 3. Public Education 4. Monitoring and Evaluation 5. Collaboration Supervision Reentry Treatment (Carter, Bumby, & Talbot, 2004)
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